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Madison Chock and Evan Bates, Olympic gold and silver medalists, are busy with post-Olympic commitments after their success in Milan-Cortina. They have chosen not to compete in the ISU World Championships but are engaged in various promotional activities.
MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 8: Gold medalists Madison Chock and Evan Bates of Team United States share a kiss after the medal ceremony for the Team Event on day two of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 8, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Qian Jun/MB Media/Getty Images)
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Madison Chock and Evan Bates arenât speed skaters, but after the last two months, they may have the skills to give it a try. Since winning Olympic gold and silver in Milan-Cortina last February, the husband-wife ice dance duo has hardly had a moment to breathe⊠or untie their laces.
Though the Michigan natives opted out of competing at Marchâs ISU World Championships in Prague, their calendars have been booked to the brim, from red carpet appearances to sponsorship interviews and a national skating tour.
Their Milan-Cortina experience was a âwhirlwind,â but for better or for worse, the duo has had little time to decompress since leaving Italy. âWe havenât been home for more than two days since Milan,â Madison reflects with a smile and a wry laugh.
While the whirlwind has persisted since the Olympics, the pair has found time to reflect on their experience and their outlook for the future.
In Milan-Cortina, Chock and Bates led Team USA to its second-straight gold medal in the team event and clinched silver in the ice dance competition in their third Olympic appearance as a competitive pair. The latterâs results were controversial, with judging controversy overshadowing the medal-worthy performances.
However, Chock and Bates have made it clear: after three Olympic medals, three world titles, and countless records broken, only one judgment matters: their own.
Their assessment? They had done all that they could in Milan-Cortina. When they stepped off the ice after a near-faultless free dance, the verdict was in. Gold, silver, or bronze medal aside, Madison and Evan "felt totally complete."
That sentiment factored into their decision to withdraw from the U.S. contingent heading to the world championships in Prague. Scheduled just six weeks after the final skate in Milan-Cortina, the event served as the final act of the 2025-26 ISU figure skating season.
Instead of returning to the world championships in search of a fourth-straight title, Chock and Bates sharpened their blades for new opportunities.
Madison Chock and Evan Bates won a gold medal in the Team Event and a silver medal in ice dance at the Milano Cortina Olympics.
They opted out of competing at the ISU World Championships in Prague due to a packed schedule filled with promotional activities.
They are busy with red carpet appearances, sponsorship interviews, and a national skating tour following their Olympic success.
They competed in the Milano Cortina Olympics on February 8, 2026.
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WEST HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 13: (EDITORS NOTE: Image was created in camera using reflective surface) Evan Bates and Madison Chock attend the Women In Film Oscars nominees cocktail party at Wheelhouse on March 13, 2026 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/WireImage)
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After clinching Olympic gold and silver, those engagements came in droves.
In the weeks that followed Milan-Cortina, the pair tallied star-studded appearances at The Academy Awards, a morning talk show segment on Live with Kelly and Mark, a cameo with the Rockettes, and red carpet movie premieres.
Their schedule then led them to Japan in early April, where they helped kick off the popular Stars on Ice tour alongside a handful of Olympic icons. The tour landed on U.S. soil a week later, and the reception was overwhelming. Fans far and wide were eager to celebrate Chock, Bates, and their fellow Olympians.
The pair performed nine shows in Japan and all nine were sold out. Days later in the United States, the first three shows in Florida sold out. Though skating interest predictably peaks during an Olympic year, the 2026 buzz felt different.
After the U.S. figure skating team won gold and the individual storylines of Chock and Bates, gold medalist Alysa Liu and âQuad Godâ Ilia Malinin made headlines, the teamâs cultural impact became undeniable.
âIt has honestly been the best feeling to just see how much hype and excitement there is around figure skating right now,â Chock adds, describing stop-after-stop of screaming fans. âThe excitement that's in the arena when we perform is unlike anything we felt in recent memory.â
The tour visits a whopping 25+ cities in as many days, with the skaters making pit-stops for promotional appearances â and interviews like this one â in between their jam-packed schedules. Like many aspects of Olympic skating, the experience has been grueling, but worth it.
Unlike in previous years, interest in figure skating has not waned since Milan-Cortina. Concurrently, the skatersâ fame now follows them off-ice. âWeâll see people at the airport and they're watching skating, or they're talking about skating,â Madison recounts. âIt's kind of surreal to see the impact that it has had on the worldwide audience and the general public.â
Midway through 2026, Madison Chock and Evan Bates are close to becoming household names, but four years earlier in Beijing, the pair could not have imagined the successes that would come in the next Olympic cycle. After finishing fourth at the 2022 Olympics, the duo nearly made the decision to end their ice dance career.
Already with three joint Olympic appearances and two world championship medals in tow, Chock and Bates were âon the fenceâ regarding retirement after Beijing. Instead, they hopped back onto the ice.
In a sport that demands immeasurable time and commitment from its athletes, the duo vowed to return under one condition: bringing their dogs to the rink, to their training, and into their Olympic journey.
âOur impetus for going forward was, if we can bring the dogs with us to the rink every day, weâre going to keep training,â Evan says. The decision stemmed from a desire to manage competitive stress while âcreating that little nucleus of a family." From the rink to the ballet studio and everything in between, Henry and Stella joined the ice dancers on their path to Milan-Cortina.
The decision paid off. After settling for silver and bronze in three world championship appearances, the duo rocketed into ice dancing stardom. Chock and Bates clinched three consecutive world titles from 2023 through 2025, culminating with team gold and their first ice dance Olympic medal in Milan-Cortina.
The mental aspect was undeniable for the Olympic athletes.
Their dogsâ presence âmade everything brighter and better in those dark, long winter months,â Evan reflects. âItâs just one of the best things life has to offer.â Thus, when presented with the opportunity to partner with Nulo Pet Food, the Olympiansâ decision was easy.
The decision made even more sense after tragedy struck in January 2025.
When American Airlines Flight 5342 collided with a United States Army helicopter on approach to Reagan International Airport, the figure skating community lost 28 athletes, coaches, and family members. In an effort to collectively grieve and honor the lives lost, many of the sportâs top skaters â including Chock and Bates â performed in a benefit event, âLegacy on Ice.â
With the tragedy came a shift in the sportâs organizational approach to competition, the pair recounts. Service animals flocked to the arena in Washington, D.C., dispatched to comfort those affected by the crash.
Months later, at the 2025 World Championships in Boston, the International Skating Union (ISU) introduced its first âcalm zone," a space âwhere athletes can pause, breathe, and refocus during the intensity of competition week.â
HEERENVEEN, NETHERLANDS - DECEMBER 5: Calm zone during day 1 of the ISU World Cup Speed Skating - Heerenveen at Thialf Ice Rink on December 5, 2025 in Heerenveen, Netherlands. (Photo by Jurij Kodrun - International Skating Union/International Skating Union via Getty Images)
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A premier feature of the space? Therapy dogs. âSkaters could go any time of day to just go hang out with some service animals and de-stress,â Bates recounts. The feature was immensely popular with skaters. During the week of competition, the ISU reported that more than 125 athletes from 12 countries used the space.
Just months later, U.S. Figure Skating announced its official partnership with Nulo, joining Chock and Bates. As the first joint effort, organizers created a dedicated Pet Therapy Area for the 2026 U.S. Championships in St. Louis. The result was, indeed, therapeutic.
âThere were so many smiles. It was just good vibes,â Bates recalls. Chock and Bates went on to win their fifth-straight U.S. title that week in Missouri. âThat kind of magical, unspoken comfort in times of stress⊠is really welcomed.â Their pets will be part of Chock and Batesâ future, no matter where it heads.
In early April, figure skating fans erupted in shock at the sight of Chock and Batesâ names in the International Selection Pool, with many labeling the development as a sign of the duoâs planned return to competition.
However, when I spoke with the skaters a week after the development, they were blissfully unaware. âI think I didnât know we got added into the international selection⊠but that makes sense,â Bates laughed, looking at Madison. âWe've been in the pool for a long time.â
MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 09: Madison Chock and partner Evan Bates of Team United States react after competing in Ice Dance - Rhythm Dance Qualification on day three of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 09, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)
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As of May 2026, their future plans remain on ice â and they will likely stay that way. After four grueling Olympic cycles, the pair is ready to âtake a breathâ from competition while remaining close to their sport. For Madison, the future could involve fashion. During Milan-Cortina, Chock drew widespread acclaim for her costume design skills.
In addition to designing her teamâs competitive costumes, Chock helped design the Olympic costumes worn by a handful of top skaters worldwide â including those competing against her in ice dance. Competitors or not, âI just want to bring as much confidence as I can to those people that I designed for,â she says.
While they canât definitively close the door on a competitive return, âfor right now, our heads are more towards show performance and show skating,â Madison says. One thingâs for sure: âWe donât want toâŠstep off the ice ever,â she insists.
âWe just love it so much.â
For the first time in their 15-year shared career, the future is uncertain. But in Evan and Madisonâs eyes, the change is welcomed. âYou know exactly what your life is like for so many years, and then when things shift, it can be exhilarating and scary. We're excited for what's to come.â
This article was originally published on Forbes.com